home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- BUSINESS, Page 72Business NotesAGRICULTUREFrostbite In the Groves
-
-
- The list of casualties runs from artichokes to zucchini. A
- huge, brutally cold mass of arctic air laid siege to California
- for six days in late December, bringing snow to places that had
- not seen it in a lifetime. The killer freeze devastated the
- state's agricultural industry. The navel-orange crop, which
- provides 90% of the U.S. supply, virtually vanished overnight.
- About 80% of the fruit may be a loss, costing growers nearly
- $500 million. Lost jobs and other indirect costs could reach an
- additional $500 million. Because the cold harmed the trees as
- well, recovery may take years.
-
- At least 20% of the avocado crop was destroyed too. Melons,
- strawberries, celery and even hardy winter vegetables like
- broccoli will probably be reduced in number and quality. Flowers
- were hit so seriously that Pasadena's Tournament of Roses parade
- will decorate many floats with leaves, bark or out-of-state
- blossoms.
-
- The entire U.S. will soon feel the chill. The wholesale
- price of increasingly scarce navel oranges has more than
- tripled, to $28 a box, and the cost of concentrated orange juice
- has moved up 15%. Growers have requested California Governor
- George Deukmejian to declare a disaster area. As the new year
- approached, another Arctic Express was moving toward
- California's frostbitten groves.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-